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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:The_Death_Guard
rdf:type
schema:Book yago:WikicatMilitaryScienceFictionNovels yago:Fiction106367107 wikidata:Q234460 dbo:Book dbo:WrittenWork yago:Novel106367879 yago:Abstraction100002137 owl:Thing yago:Wikicat1939Novels yago:WrittenCommunication106349220 yago:Wikicat1930sScienceFictionNovels dbo:Work yago:Writing106362953 yago:LiteraryComposition106364329 yago:Communication100033020 wikidata:Q571 bibo:Book schema:CreativeWork wikidata:Q386724
rdfs:label
The Death Guard
rdfs:comment
The Death Guard is the only published novel of the English author Philip George Chadwick (1893 in Batley, Yorkshire – 1955 in Brighton, Sussex). Although the author is virtually unknown to the wider public, his work has received attention from literary scholars. The novel contains many themes later developed by L Ron Hubbard and James Blish. Chadwick was a political thinker with socialist tendencies, a Fabian and subsequently an Independent and a disciple of H.G. Wells.
foaf:name
The Death Guard
dbp:name
The Death Guard
foaf:depiction
n16:The_Death_Guard.jpg
dc:publisher
Hutchinson
dcterms:subject
dbc:Military_science_fiction_novels dbc:1939_British_novels dbc:British_science_fiction_novels dbc:Invasion_literature dbc:Hutchinson_(publisher)_books dbc:1939_science_fiction_novels
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22715537
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1124300229
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dbo:thumbnail
n16:The_Death_Guard.jpg?width=300
dbp:author
Philip George Chadwick
dbp:caption
First edition
dbp:country
dbr:England
dbp:genre
Science fiction novel
dbp:isbn
978
dbp:language
English
dbp:mediaType
Print
dbp:pubDate
1939
dbp:publisher
dbr:Hutchinson_(publisher)
dbo:abstract
The Death Guard is the only published novel of the English author Philip George Chadwick (1893 in Batley, Yorkshire – 1955 in Brighton, Sussex). Although the author is virtually unknown to the wider public, his work has received attention from literary scholars. The novel contains many themes later developed by L Ron Hubbard and James Blish. Chadwick was a political thinker with socialist tendencies, a Fabian and subsequently an Independent and a disciple of H.G. Wells. Legend has it that H.G. Wells used to refer to this book as one of the greatest he had ever read. It was written shortly after World War I, but by the time it was picked up for publication, World War II was already underway and allegedly, Chadwick had been killed in combat, though the 1992 paperback states that he died in 1955. To complicate matters even further, the printing house that was handling the first run of the novel was bombed in an air raid, and almost all copies were destroyed. Consequently, most science fiction fans wrote off The Death Guard as pure myth, a figment of Wells's prodigious imagination, and for years it was considered a lost novel. In 1992 it was republished,with an introduction by Brian Aldiss. The Death Guard was cited in Karl Edward Wagner's "The Thirteen Best Science Fiction Horror Novels" and Ramsey Campbell's "Thirteen Novels on the Edge of Horror".
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wikipedia-en:The_Death_Guard?oldid=1124300229&ns=0
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5538
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978-0-14-017060-3
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dbr:England
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dbr:Science_fiction
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dbr:Hardcover
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dbr:Hutchinson_(publisher)
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wikipedia-en:The_Death_Guard